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Field Notes: Stories from St. Martin's
St Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
83 episodes
5 days ago
Sermons, teaching, and interviews from St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church in Keller, Texas. We seek to proclaim the Good New of Jesus Christ, so that the people of northeast Tarrant County and beyond might know they are loved by God.
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Christianity
Religion & Spirituality
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All content for Field Notes: Stories from St. Martin's is the property of St Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Sermons, teaching, and interviews from St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church in Keller, Texas. We seek to proclaim the Good New of Jesus Christ, so that the people of northeast Tarrant County and beyond might know they are loved by God.
Show more...
Christianity
Religion & Spirituality
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We Are Not Worthy
Field Notes: Stories from St. Martin's
10 minutes 43 seconds
1 month ago
We Are Not Worthy

On this Thanksgiving Eve, Father Alan reflects on John 6:25-35 and the honest truth that none of us are ever fully satisfied.He begins with his recent HYROX race, where even after beating his goal he crossed the finish line wanting more. That feeling, he says, is something we all carry. We try to satisfy our restlessness with achievement, success, possessions, or praise, but the hunger always returns.Jesus meets a crowd in John 6 who feel that same hunger. They have just witnessed a miracle, yet they come searching for more. Instead of shaming their need, Jesus invites them to be honest about it. He reminds them of the manna in the wilderness, when God provided enough for one day at a time. Then he makes the central claim: “I am the bread of life.” Jesus does not offer something to fill us. He offers himself.Father Alan reminds us that Thanksgiving is not about pretending we are full. It is about naming our dependence on God, the one who meets us in our hunger with grace we cannot earn. Like the Eucharist, Thanksgiving begins when we bring our empty hands to the God whose property is always to have mercy.Jesus is the one who satisfies the hunger we cannot fill on our own. From that gift, real gratitude begins.

Field Notes: Stories from St. Martin's
Sermons, teaching, and interviews from St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church in Keller, Texas. We seek to proclaim the Good New of Jesus Christ, so that the people of northeast Tarrant County and beyond might know they are loved by God.